Yes. They can be easily moved by hand or a stiff wind depending on the direction.
trouble said:
I see it differently. The BBC, Dorn, and the mayor look worse to me after this article.
Jsimonds58 said:
100%, this absolutely reeks of folks scrambling over each other to try and cover their own asses. Sloppy, unorganized and scared.
Really hope KBTX pins them to the wall on these inconsistencies
His duties as mayor have much to do with his arrangement with Rafter, i.e. placing his cows on property owned by the BBC, an entity which has a direct tie to the city of Bryan. At a minimum, it appears to be an ethics violation. Elected officials are not supposed to have advantages not available to the general public. As I type that statement, I have to shake my head because we all know political advantages exist from here to D.C. Doesn't make it right.Snoodish said:
Cslifer, the pilot never mentioned that he contacted the BBC or Rafter so the delay in getting the plane was his fault as he didn't contact the right people. If Gutierrez demanded money that's his right to do so. Clearly his arrangement with Rafter in his cattle business has nothing to do with his duties as mayor and if his cattle were on Rafter's leased land, one would think he has some deal to keep his cattle there during the artificial insemination so the lawyer may not be wrong either.
Snoodish said:
. If Gutierrez demanded money that's his right to do so. .
maroon barchetta said:
So he's supposed to just get a tow truck and get it out in two days?
Wrong, the correct way to do so is by filing a claim with the insurance company... Not by blackmail or extortion.Snoodish said:
Cslifer, the pilot never mentioned that he contacted the BBC or Rafter so the delay in getting the plane was his fault as he didn't contact the right people. If Gutierrez demanded money that's his right to do so. Clearly his arrangement with Rafter in his cattle business has nothing to do with his duties as mayor and if his cattle were on Rafter's leased land, one would think he has some deal to keep his cattle there during the artificial insemination so the lawyer may not be wrong either.
Normally the insurance company will bid the move out to various salvage companies. A few are instate, most are out of state.threecatcorner said:maroon barchetta said:
So he's supposed to just get a tow truck and get it out in two days?
Why are they telling him to come get it by Thursday? Considering he lives in another state, they ought to at least be giving him to the end of this weekend.
Gutierrez (tells attorney he leased the land)Hornbeck said:
Lots of folks with contradicting "facts":
BBC (says they are independent of the city, which is not entirely true)
Gutierrez (tells attorney he leased the land)
Dorn (says *he* leased the land… ) (I'm wondering if that date was 3/13)
Matt Doss, Attorney at Law (says Gutierrez is lessee)
The plot doth thicken…
In my humble opinion, this press release is a smoke screen for a bunch of folks scrambling to cover their collective @$$es
WTAW reported the lease was a 10 year lease, for $1/year; a helluva deal, that would have had people lined up to utilize, but just a coincidence that Rafter D and the mayor already had an agreement in place, to put the longhorns on the property? And at an overstocked quantity, one likely reason the cattle were repeatedly going through the fences?Snoodish said:
You tin foil hat people with law degrees obtained from watching a few Law and Order episodes are ridiculous. The BBC statement makes it clear the plane owner made outrageous claims about being denied his plane when he didnt even do minimal research to contact the actual landowner (BBC) or the the tenant (Rafter). The pilot also readily admitted he screwed up several times in refusing to declare an emergency which would've allowed him immediate runway access at any municipal airport between Austin and Easterwood and he made poor decisions putting his gear down early causing his plane to lose speed. Had he known what he was doing the whole incident could've been avoided.
Governmental entities and non profits like the BBC lease out land or their buildings all the time. A&M owns the land where Century Square is located and leases it out yet no one is whining about it. I also doubt those whining here have ever worked cattle before, especially on horseback and all the while trying to do artificial insemination. It shouldn't be a surprise that a herd of cattle would scatter after a plane landed in the field and then emergency personnel and investigators descended on the scene shutting down the operation. Embryo transfers for cattle is a lucrative business and the timing matters so it's not earth shattering that the rancher wants to recover his lost income.
Charpie said:
I think that Texas Monthly and Texas Tribune might be interested in this as well.
Snoodish said:
Cslifer, the pilot never mentioned that he contacted the BBC or Rafter so the delay in getting the plane was his fault as he didn't contact the right people. If Gutierrez demanded money that's his right to do so. Clearly his arrangement with Rafter in his cattle business has nothing to do with his duties as mayor and if his cattle were on Rafter's leased land, one would think he has some deal to keep his cattle there during the artificial insemination so the lawyer may not be wrong either.
That in itself is not the problem. Now if A&M were leasing a Century Square unit to a member of the Board of Regents for $1/mo, then that would be a problem.Snoodish said:
Governmental entities and non profits like the BBC lease out land or their buildings all the time. A&M owns the land where Century Square is located and leases it out yet no one is whining about it.
This.Flatlander said:That in itself is not the problem. Now if A&M were leasing a Century Square unit to a member of the Board of Regents for $1/mo, then that would be a problem.Snoodish said:
Governmental entities and non profits like the BBC lease out land or their buildings all the time. A&M owns the land where Century Square is located and leases it out yet no one is whining about it.